Los Angeles Times

One killed in New Jersey train crash

Officials are unsure why it was speeding when it barreled into a Hoboken, N.J., station.

- By Barbara Demick and Matt Hansen barbara.demick@latimes.com Times staff writer Demick reported from New York and special correspond­ent Hansen from Hoboken.

Over 100 commuters are also injured when the train barrels into the Hoboken station.

HOBOKEN, N.J. — Investigat­ors are examining why a packed commuter train barreled into a train station at such a high speed that it flew onto the platform and knocked down a ceiling, leaving one person dead and more than 100 others injured.

The crash took place at the Hoboken Terminal, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, at the height of rush hour, about 8:45 a.m. Thursday.

Rescue workers were able to pull the critically injured engineer out of the front of the train and were questionin­g him about why the train didn’t stop. One woman who had been waiting on the platform was killed when a ceiling supported by columns knocked out by the train collapsed on top of her.

In May 2011, a similar accident took place at the Hoboken station when a train traveling at an excessive speed plowed into the bumper post at the end of the platform. Thirty people were injured.

In past crashes of this type, the cause has been a lack of attention by the engineer or an incapacita­ting event such as a heart attack. But after a pair of explosions in New York and New Jersey this month, investigat­ors will also consider sabotage or terrorism, although authoritie­s said there was no evidence of either.

“We have no indication that this is anything other than a tragic accident, but we are going to let the law enforcemen­t profession­als pursue the facts,” said New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at a news conference at the station.

“The train came in at much too high a rate of speed, and the question is, why is that?” Christie said.

Witnesses described passengers climbing out of the windows of the train, bleeding from their heads and limbs. The station looked like it had been bombed, with the collapsed ceiling and mangled beams twisted over the tracks, the smell of burnt metal heavy in the air.

“It was horror,” said William Blaine, a train engineer who had been at a nearby Dunkin Donuts when the train slammed into the station. “It was a kaboom, like an earthquake. It sounded like a bomb.”

Passengers staggered out of the train with head and leg injuries amid live electrical wires and running water, he said.

Blaine said typical railroad protocol would have required trains to operate at no more than 10 or 15 mph in the area, slow enough to “stop in time.”

The Hoboken Terminal, an ornate 1907 building with a green cooper roof on the Hudson River, is the last stop for hundreds of trains that come in from New Jersey and upstate New York. About 50,000 people per day pass through here daily, usually commuting to New York City by ferry or through a line that passes under the river.

Normally trains slow down and stop at a bumper where they discharge their passengers. But Mike Larson, a New Jersey transit employee, told television reporters that the train appeared to be going about 30 mph.

“He went straight through the bumper block, through the air and took the ceiling out,” Larson said said. “It was just horrific, an explosion of concrete dust and electrical wires.’’

The train that smashed into the station was identified as New Jersey transit train number 1614, which originates in Spring Valley, N.Y., and passes through northern New Jersey. It carried 250 people, many of whom were standing amid the rush-hour crowd.

Passengers said they quickly realized the train was going too fast.

“I thought to myself, ‘Oh, my God, he’s not slowing up, and this is where we usually stop,’ ” Linda Albelli, 62, told Reuters. “‘We’re going too fast.’ And with that there was this tremendous crash.”

When the train hit the bumper, passengers said, their phones flew out of their hands, their glasses off their faces. Most of the injured were expected to be released from the hospital Wednesday night.

The condition of the train was so precarious that emergency crews had not removed the event recording device from the engine car, said Bella Dinh-Zarr, vice chairwoman of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, which has opened an investigat­ion into the crash. She said there was also concern about the possibilit­y of asbestos exposure from the station’s canopy that collapsed atop the train.

Dinh-Zarr said at a news conference Thursday that the engineer had been released from the hospital and that investigat­ors would be interviewi­ng him. That interview, along with informatio­n from the data recorder, should provide answers to why the train was traveling so quickly.

The accident also brought up the question about why the railroad had not installed the congressio­nally mandated safety system known as positive train control that uses satellites and computers to prevent trains from traveling too fast or missing signals.

“That is absolutely one area that we always look into for every rail accident,” Dinh-Zarr said. “The NTSB has been recommendi­ng positive train control for 40 years.”

Federal investigat­ors have said that the technology, installed on less than 20% of the tracks for which it has been scheduled, could have prevented many fatal crashes caused by inattentiv­e engineers.

 ?? Ian Samuel Associated Press ?? UPON ITS arrival at Hoboken Terminal, a commuter train launched onto the platform and caused a ceiling to collapse, killing a woman who was standing below.
Ian Samuel Associated Press UPON ITS arrival at Hoboken Terminal, a commuter train launched onto the platform and caused a ceiling to collapse, killing a woman who was standing below.
 ?? Eduardo Munoz Alvarez Getty Images ?? AN INJURED woman is assisted after the accident. Investigat­ors will consider sabotage or terrorism as possible causes, but officials said there was no evidence of either so far.
Eduardo Munoz Alvarez Getty Images AN INJURED woman is assisted after the accident. Investigat­ors will consider sabotage or terrorism as possible causes, but officials said there was no evidence of either so far.
 ?? Eduardo Munoz Alvarez Getty Images ?? SOME OF THE INJURED await medical attention. A train engineer who was at a doughnut shop when the crash occurred said, “It was a kaboom, like an earthquake. It sounded like a bomb.”
Eduardo Munoz Alvarez Getty Images SOME OF THE INJURED await medical attention. A train engineer who was at a doughnut shop when the crash occurred said, “It was a kaboom, like an earthquake. It sounded like a bomb.”

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